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Functional Kotlin

You're reading from   Functional Kotlin Extend your OOP skills and implement Functional techniques in Kotlin and Arrow

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2018
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781788476485
Length 350 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (2):
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Mario Arias Mario Arias
Author Profile Icon Mario Arias
Mario Arias
Rivu Chakraborty Rivu Chakraborty
Author Profile Icon Rivu Chakraborty
Rivu Chakraborty
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Toc

Table of Contents (16) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Kotlin – Data Types, Objects, and Classes FREE CHAPTER 2. Getting Started with Functional Programming 3. Immutability - It's Important 4. Functions, Function Types, and Side Effects 5. More on Functions 6. Delegates in Kotlin 7. Asynchronous Programming with Coroutines 8. Collections and Data Operations in Kotlin 9. Functional Programming and Reactive Programming 10. Functors, Applicatives, and Monads 11. Working with Streams in Kotlin 12. Getting Started with Arrow 13. Arrow Types 14. Kotlin's Quick Start 15. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introduction to coroutines


Let's start with a simple example without coroutines:

import kotlin.concurrent.thread

fun main(args: Array<String>) {
   thread {
      Thread.sleep(1000)
      println("World!")
   }
   print("Hello ")
   Thread.sleep(2000)
}

The thread function executes a block of code in a different thread. Inside the block, we are simulating an expensive I/O computation (such as accessing data from a microservice over HTTP) with Thread.sleep. Thread.sleep will block the current thread for the number of milliseconds passed as a parameter. In this example, we don't wait until the computation finishes to keep working on other things; we print another message, "Hello", while the other computation is being executed. At the end, we wait for two seconds until the computation is finished.

That's not a pretty code, and we can do better: 

fun main(args: Array<String>) {
   val computation = thread {
      Thread.sleep(1000)
      println("World!")
   }
   print("Hello ")
  ...
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